Which emperor's calligraphy is called Shoujinti?

Shoujinti is a calligraphy font created by Song Huizong, also known as Shoujinti or Shoujinti, also known as Shoujinti Crane, which is a kind of regular script. Its characteristics are thin and straight, horizontal pen with hook, vertical pen with point, throwing like a dagger, holding like a knife, vertical hook slender. His brushwork originated from Chu Suiliang and Xue Ji, and his writing style is thinner and stronger. His structural brushwork is taken from Huang Tingjian's block letters, stretching and standing upright.

In his early years, Song Huizong learned from Xue and Huang Tingjian, and joined Chu Suiliang's various schools, which was quite slim, beautiful and comprehensive. He changed to Xue and Xue Yao's fonts and formed his own style, which was called "Shoujinti". Song Huizong's thin gold-lettered works have been handed down from generation to generation, such as "A Thousand Characters in Regular Script" and "Poems of Fang Qiu".

"Imitating Song Style" in modern art fonts is created by imitating the charm of Shoujin style. Thin gold book is a unique font, which is fast and erratic with fine handwriting, so as to be thin without losing meat. At the corner, you can clearly see the traces of Tibetan front and exposed front. From the image, this book should be "thin and hard", and "gold" is easy to "hard", which is a respect for imperial books.